Abstract

The Office of Pesticide Programs (OPP) of the Environmental Protection Agency has developed a standard protocol for evaluating the dermal penetration of pesticides in the rat. This protocol was formalized in 1994 as a guideline for Dermal Absorption Studies of Pesticides. To date, in excess of 263 studies on the dermal absorption of over 160 pesticide chemicals have been submitted to OPP as part of the pesticide registration and risk assessment processes. The majority of these studies has been performed according to the OPP standard protocol in the rat. These studies constitute the largest database in existence on the dermal absorption of a wide variety of chemicals using a standard protocol. From this standard protocol it is possible to describe, quantitatively with dose and time, the entrance of a chemical into and penetration through the mammalian epidermis into the systemic circulation, its concentration in blood and in the body, and its excretion in urine and feces. This article describes the experimental design of the standard protocol and presents examples of the types of pesticides studied: pesticides that are neither volatile nor damage the skin (the most common type), volatile pesticides, and pesticides that damage the skin. Examples are selected to illustrate differences in the pattern of dermal uptake and subsequent absorption into the systemic compartment among and within the three classes.

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